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Media Wrong About Katrina-Related Economic Downturn
September employment was little-changed
despite predictions of 500,000 job losses.
By Noel Sheppard
Free Market Project
October 7, 2005
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Remember all those reports filed by the mainstream media predicting
doom and gloom right after Katrina devastated New Orleans? Well, the
first significant piece of economic data to be released since the
hurricanes hit suggests that these media prognostications – as
predicted by the Free Market Project on September 6 – had no
basis in fact.
    This morning, the Labor Department released employment
numbers for the month of September, and they were much stronger than
forecast. In fact, they were so strong that the U.S. dollar rallied
against most of the world’s currencies in expectation that the
Federal Reserve might raise interest rates further than many
economists had hoped.
    To refresh everyone’s memory, here is a sampling of
what the media were saying about the economy after Katrina first
made landfall:
- Edmund L. Andrews of The New
York Times wrote this on September 3: “That would have been
encouraging news to many forecasters, but it was overwhelmed
by a growing expectation that Hurricane Katrina is likely to
cause substantially slower growth for at least the next
several months.”
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- Joel Havemann of the Los
Angeles Times took a similar approach: “But Hurricane Katrina
will probably end the economy's 27-month streak of job gains.
Katrina's effects — not only on the Gulf Coast regions where
it struck but also on the national economy via higher energy
prices and disrupted ports — could result in the loss of as
many as 500,000 jobs in September, analysts said.”
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- The Washington Post’s Nell
Henderson
wrote this: “Hurricane Katrina, by forcing an exodus of
workers and families from New Orleans and surrounding areas,
appears likely to rank alongside Sept. 11, 2001, and the Arab
oil embargo of 1973 as one of the nation's most serious and
sudden economic shocks – particularly in terms of job losses –
in recent memory.”
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- And, just this morning, Andy
Serwer of Fortune magazine said on CNN’s “American Morning”:
“You can see the 200,000 estimates of jobs lost.”
    Despite all
this bearishness, the
Labor Department reported this morning that payroll employment
was little changed, with a net loss of 35,000 jobs in September. The
unemployment rate went to 5.1 percent, but that’s still lower than
any month from 2002 to 2004, as The Heritage Foundation’s Tim Kane
pointed out.
    The Bureau of Labor Statistics said, “The measures of
employment and unemployment reported in this news release reflect
both the impact of Hurricane Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast in
late August, and ongoing labor market trends. Over the 12 months
ending in August, payroll employment grew by an average of 194,000 a
month and the unemployment rate trended downward.”
    To put this in perspective, analysts had been looking
for a decline of 150,000 in these non-farm payrolls. As such, when
combined with the upward revisions of 77,000 jobs to the original
July and August estimates, this report was surprisingly strong. In
fact, factoring out job losses directly related to Katrina, the
economy has added more than 200,000 jobs per month the last three
months, which is outstanding.
    Maybe this explains why Serwer and CNN’s Soledad
O’Brien seemed amazed when the new numbers were released:
O’Brien: “That new jobs report we've
been talking about all morning is out. To break down the numbers,
here is Andy Serwer.”
Serwer: “Let’s get right to it, Soledad. 35,000 jobs net lost in the
economy in the month of September. The first time we've lost jobs
since May 2003. How could it only be 35,000?”
O’Brien: “You're saying the estimates were going as high as
400,000?”
    The Associated
Press followed with an
article entitled “Katrina Pushes Unemployment Rate Higher” with
the sub-heading “Economy Loses Jobs in Sept. for 1st Time in Over 2
Years; Katrina Pushes Unemployment Rate Up.” Jeannine Aversa began
her report:
“The economy lost jobs in September for
the first time in over two years as economic convulsions from a
devastating Gulf Coast hurricane shook the job market and pushed the
national unemployment rate up to 5.1 percent.
“The report, released by the Labor Department on Friday, provided
the most extensive picture of the jobs climate in the aftermath of
the deadly and destructive Hurricane Katrina, the costliest natural
disaster in U.S. history.”
    Curiously,
nowhere in this report did Aversa mention that this job loss was
significantly lower than economists had been expecting, or that most
analysts cheered the news. For instance, here’s how Joe Richter of
Bloomberg
framed the same announcement:
“Hurricane Katrina pushed the U.S.
unemployment rate up to 5.1 percent in September as the economy lost
35,000 jobs, fewer than expected and evidence that the storm wasn't
strong enough to derail the expansion.”
Richter then quoted economists who were also bullish about this
report:
“‘The Fed is going to look at this number and go full-steam ahead
with 25-basis-point increases at its next two meetings to keep
inflation in check,’ said John Silvia, chief economist at Wachovia
Corp. in Charlotte, North Carolina. ‘This is a pretty good payroll
number for September.’”
And:
“‘It's a very resilient economy that's likely to be doing extremely
well in a few months,’ said Kurt Karl, chief U.S. economist at Swiss
Reinsurance Co. in New York, who predicted payrolls would be little
changed from August.”
    Kane,
Heritage’s labor policy research fellow, wrote in his assessment of
the numbers: “The bottom line is that the next few months’ job
numbers will be much more important signals than today’s about where
the economy is heading.” But the impatient media haven’t waited to
let the American economy do what it does so well – grow.
Noel Sheppard is an economist, business owner, and contributing
writer for the Free Market Project. He is also contributing editor
of the Media Research Center’s NewsBusters.org. Noel welcomes
feedback at [email protected].
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